All hail the tale of Becky Something, the brilliant and brash frontwoman for the 90s rock band Something She. Becky is foul-mouthed, nihilistic and incredibly talented. Mother of one, bandmate to two, and friend to none, Becky is at the height of her career and the top of the party game—with only one direction to go.

Filmmaker Alex Ross Perry, best known for his literary-inspired works like LISTEN UP PHILIP and GOLDEN EXITS, changes modes here, giving us a ride on Becky's freight train to self-destruction. Drawing from examples of experiential filmmaking by the likes of John Cassavetes and Paul Thomas Anderson, Perry whips his characters and sequences into a frenzy of substance abuse and personal combustion as we follow the starlet through backstage antics and hostile recording sessions. He keeps the audience on their toes as lengthy tracking turns into uniquely telling angles (courtesy of 35mm cinematography from director of photography Sean Price Williams) and his sudden shifts in tone hit us with waves of emotion. The already accolade-showered Elisabeth Moss is a tour de force as Becky, the eye of this hurricane, tearing everything she cares about apart until all that is left is to rebuild.

For Moss, this is a career-defining performance that emanates pathos and sweat. She is supported by a slew of perfectly cast recognizable faces, including Amber Heard, Cara Delevingne, Virginia Madsen, Dan Stevens, Ashley Benson and Eric Stoltz. The film is punk rock in every sense of the term, and reminds us of the humanity behind the f*ckup in everyone. (Synopsis from the Toronto International Film Festival)

“Moss's oscillating, energy-devouring performance and the real-time composition of Perry's scenes make it almost impossible to look away…In a climate in which more and more creators are compelled to discuss and depict disordered states onscreen, HER SMELL is a rare project that feels holistic enough to actually capture such a state, not just refract it through an audacious formal exercise.” —Emily Yoshida, Vulture
“Once you're in there, you go with it. Elisabeth Moss's commitment, and the burnished bravura of her talent, pull you through...You won’t soon forget Moss’ self-annihilating radiance.” —Owen Gleiberman, Variety
“Moss fills Becky with enough wild energy, charisma, and pain to keep her from ever becoming a cliche. To say it’s all in the eyes feels like the understatement of the year, as she throws her entire being into the role. But there’s something about her gaze that’s both frightened and predatory, her heart beating through her pupils to let the supporting cast know that she could either die or destroy everything in the room at any given moment.” —Dan Cafrey, Consequence of Sound